Connecticut Route14 is one of several secondary routes from eastern Connecticut into Rhode Island. It runs from the Willimantic section of the town of Windham to the Rhode Island state line in Sterling.

Route description

CT 14 intersecting CT 97 in Scotland.

Route14 begins at a junction with Route66 (Main Street) in Willimantic, initially as Main Street which changes to Brick Top Road after 0.2 miles (0.32km). The road runs through Windham Center and briefly overlaps Route203 as North Road, shifting to Scotland Road as it heads into the town of Scotland. In Scotland, Route14 is known as Huntington Road and Palmer Road. It also overlaps Route 97 for 0.68 miles (1.09km) from the eastern section of town to the center of it.

Route14 continues east into the town of Canterbury where the road name changes to Westminster Road. The road intersects with Route169 in the town center, at which point the road name changes to Lovell Lane and Plainfield Road. Immediately after crossing the Quinebaug River into the town of Plainfield, Route14 turns left onto Black Hill Road while Route14A continues straight as Canterbury Road. Route14 passes through the village of Central Village as Main Street (while overlapped with Route12) then East Main Street. It crosses under I-395 at Exit 32 along the north bank of the Moosup River.

East of I-395, Route14 heads into the village of Moosup where the road uses a pair of one-way streets. Eastbound traffic uses Ward Avenue while westbound traffic uses Prospect Street. Heading out of the town of Plainfield, Route14 uses Main Street then North Main Street, which later changes to Sterling Road near the town line. Sterling Road goes through the town center and meets with the east end of Route14A at the Rhode Island state line. The road continues as Rhode Island Route 14.

A 4.4-mile (7.1km) section between Windham and Scotland is a designated state scenic road, running through mostly rural areas.

Route 14A

Connecticut Route14A is an alternate route of Route14 in the Plainfield and Sterling areas. Prior to 1963, Route14A was the original road used by Route14 between Canterbury and Plainfield. In Sterling, modern Route14A was known as Route211 between 1932 and 1950. From 1950 to 1963, the Sterling portion became an extension of former Route95 (now Route49). Route14A is 10.30 miles (16.58km) long and has junctions with Route12 and I-395. It runs south of Route14 between Canterbury center and the Rhode Island state line. Route14A serves the villages of Plainfield Village and Oneco.

History

Route14A east of Route12 was part of an early toll road connecting the cities of Norwich and Providence via Plainfield Village. The road was known as the New London and Windham County Turnpike and was chartered in 1795. It used modern Route12 from Norwich to Plainfield and modern Route14A to the Rhode Island state line. Modern Route14 west of Route12 was the eastern half of another early turnpike known as the Windham Turnpike, which was chartered in 1799 and began in Coventry and ran to Willimantic using modern Route31 and Route32, then from Willimantic through Scotland to Plainfield using modern Route14.

In the 1920s, the Willimantic-Plainfield portion of the Windham Turnpike was designated as State Highway 141. The road from Central Village via Sterling center to the Rhode Island state line was assigned as State Highway 103, which continued as the same number in Rhode Island. The Route14 designation was established as part of the 1932 state highway renumbering from old Highways 141 and 103 via an overlap with Route12. When it was established, Route14 extended further west than it does today. It extended all the way to Waterbury along modern Route66, East Main Street in Meriden, modern Route322, and Meriden Road in Waterbury (SR844). The route served as an alternative to U.S. Route 6. This western extension was signed as part of U.S.Route6A from 1941 to 1968, when it was replaced by I-84 as the main through route in the area. Route14 was rerouted in Plainfield and Sterling in 1963, with the old route becoming the western half of modern Route14A. The eastern half of Route14A was designated on former unsigned SR586 in Plainfield and former Route211 in Sterling.

Junction list

The entire route is in Windham County.

LocationmikmDestinationsNotes
Windham0.000.00Route66/ Route195Columbia, Hartford, Chaplin, Providence, RIWestern terminus
1.893.04Route203 north– North WindhamWestern end of Route 203 concurrency
2.714.36Route203 south– South WindhamEastern end of Route 203 concurrency
Scotland6.6410.69Route97 south– Baltic, Hanover, NorwichWestern end of Route 97 concurrency
7.3211.78Route97 north– HamptonEastern end of Route 97 concurrency
Canterbury12.9320.81Route169Brooklyn, Lisbon, Norwich
Plainfield13.4621.66Route14A east– PlainfieldWestern terminus of Route 14A
16.9927.34Route12 north– Wauregan, DanielsonWestern end of Route 12 concurrency
17.2627.78Route12 south– Plainfield, NorwichEastern end of Route 12 concurrency
17.7728.60I-395Norwich, Worcester, MAExit32 on I-395; former Route 52
Sterling24.2639.04Route14A west– Plainfield, OnecoEastern terminus of Route 14A
24.3339.16Route14 east– ProvidenceContinuation into Rhode Island
1.000mi = 1.609km; 1.000km = 0.621mi
  • - Connecticut Route 14 History

External links

Media related toConnecticut Route 14at Wikimedia Commons